Iran, Israel and Netanyahu
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WASHINGTON − President Donald Trump denied reports he had reached out to Tehran seeking an end to the five-day Iran-Israel air war, after earlier suggesting he was working toward a broad Iran nuclear deal.
Iran called on U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday to force Israel to cease fire as the only way to end the four-day-old aerial war, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country was on the "path to victory".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will sit down for an interview airing Sunday with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, his first since Israel's strikes on Iran.
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India Today on MSNNetanyahu says Israeli strikes set Iran's nuclear program back ‘a very long time'Israeli PM Netanyahu claims airstrikes have severely damaged Iran's nuclear program and weakened its regime. As explosions rock Tehran, he warns collapse is possible; Trump urges Iran to resume talks.
Trump arrived at the White House early Tuesday at a moment of choosing in his presidency. Israel, with five days of missile strikes, has done considerable damage to Iran and believes it can now deal a permanent blow to Tehran’s nuclear program — particularly if it gets a little more help from the Republican president.
Israel was not ready for a war of attrition and hopes for the magician Donald Trump. In Telegram, Israelis share what they discuss "in the kitchens," the observer writes Pravda.Ru Lyubov Stepushova.
Iran fired a new wave of missile attacks on Israel early Monday, triggering air raid sirens across the country as emergency services reported at least five killed and dozens more wounded in the fourth
Trump vetoed Netanyahu's plan to target Iran's Ayatollah Khamenei in June 2025, fearing wider war. Why regime change won't end Iran's nuclear threat.